I Say No by Wilkie Collins (reader novel txt) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
- Performer: -
Book online «I Say No by Wilkie Collins (reader novel txt) đ». Author Wilkie Collins
Having arrived at this resolution, her mind reverted to Alban.
Some of the sharp things she had said to him, subjected to after-reflection in solitude, failed to justify themselves. Her better sense began to reproach her. She tried to silence that unwelcome monitor by laying the blame on Alban. Why had he been so patient and so good? What harm was there in his calling her âEmilyâ? If he had told her to call him by his Christian name, she might have done it. How noble he looked, when he got up to go away; he was actually handsome! Women may say what they please and write what they please: their natural instinct is to find their master in a manâespecially when they like him. Sinking lower and lower in her own estimation, Emily tried to turn the current of her thoughts in another direction. She took up a bookâopened it, looked into it, threw it across the room.
If Alban had returned at that moment, resolved on a reconciliationâif he had said, âMy dear, I want to see you like yourself again; will you give me a kiss, and make it upââwould he have left her crying, when he went away? She was crying now.
CHAPTER XXVII.
MENTOR AND TELEMACHUS.
If Emilyâs eyes could have followed Alban as her thoughts were following him, she would have seen him stop before he reached the end of the road in which the cottage stood. His heart was full of tenderness and sorrow: the longing to return to her was more than he could resist. It would be easy to wait, within view of the gate, until the doctorâs visit came to an end. He had just decided to go back and keep watchâwhen he heard rapid footsteps approaching. There (devil take him!) was the doctor himself.
âI have something to say to you, Mr. Morris. Which way are you walking?â
âAny way,â Alban answeredânot very graciously.
âThen let us take the turning that leads to my house. Itâs not customary for strangers, especially when they happen to be Englishmen, to place confidence in each other. Let me set the example of violating that rule. I want to speak to you about Miss Emily. May I take your arm? Thank you. At my age, girls in generalâunless they are my patientsâare not objects of interest to me. But that girl at the cottageâI daresay I am in my dotageâI tell you, sir, she has bewitched me! Upon my soul, I could hardly be more anxious about her, if I was her father. And, mind, I am not an affectionate man by nature. Are you anxious about her too?â
âYes.â
âIn what way?â
âIn what way are you anxious, Doctor Allday?â
The doctor smiled grimly.
âYou donât trust me? Well, I have promised to set the example. Keep your mask on, sirâmine is off, come what may of it. But, observe: if you repeat what I am going to sayââ
Alban would hear no more. âWhatever you may say, Doctor Allday, is trusted to my honor. If you doubt my honor, be so good as to let go my armâI am not walking your way.â
The doctorâs hand tightened its grasp. âThat little flourish of temper, my dear sir, is all I want to set me at my ease. I feel I have got hold of the right man. Now answer me this. Have you ever heard of a person named Miss Jethro?â
Alban suddenly came to a standstill.
âAll right!â said the doctor. âI couldnât have wished for a more satisfactory reply.â
âWait a minute,â Alban interposed. âI know Miss Jethro as a teacher at Miss Laddâs school, who left her situation suddenlyâand I know no more.â
The doctorâs peculiar smile made its appearance again.
âSpeaking in the vulgar tone,â he said, âyou seem to be in a hurry to wash your hands of Miss Jethro.â
âI have no reason to feel any interest in her,â Alban replied.
âDonât be too sure of that, my friend. I have something to tell you which may alter your opinion. That ex-teacher at the school, sir, knows how the late Mr. Brown met his death, and how his daughter has been deceived about it.â
Alban listened with surpriseâand with some little doubt, which he thought it wise not to acknowledge.
âThe report of the inquest alludes to a ârelativeâ who claimed the body,â he said. âWas that ârelativeâ the person who deceived Miss Emily? And was the person her aunt?â
âI must leave you to take your own view,â Doctor Allday replied. âA promise binds me not to repeat the information that I have received. Setting that aside, we have the same object in viewâand we must take care not to get in each otherâs way. Here is my house. Let us go in, and make a clean breast of it on both sides.â
Established in the safe seclusion of his study, the doctor set the example of confession in these plain terms:
âWe only differ in opinion on one point,â he said. âWe both think it likely (from our experience of the women) that the suspected murderer had an accomplice. I say the guilty person is Miss Jethro. You sayâMrs. Rook.â
âWhen you have read my copy of the report,â Alban answered, âI think you will arrive at my conclusion. Mrs. Rook might have entered the outhouse in which the two men slept, at any time during the night, while her husband was asleep. The jury believed her when she declared that she never woke till the morning. I donât.â
âI am open to conviction, Mr. Morris. Now about the future. Do you mean to go on with your inquiries?â
âEven if I had no other motive than mere curiosity,â Alban answered, âI think I should go on. But I have a more urgent purpose in view. All that I have done thus far, has been done in Emilyâs interests. My object, from the first, has been to preserve her from any associationâin the past or in the futureâwith the woman whom I believe to have been concerned in her fatherâs death. As I have already told you, she is innocently doing all she can, poor thing, to put obstacles in my way.â
âYes, yes,â said the doctor; âshe means to write to Mrs. Rookâand you have nearly quarreled about it. Trust me to take that matter in hand. I donât regard it as serious. But I am mortally afraid of what you are doing in Emilyâs interests. I wish you would give it up.â
âWhy?â
âBecause I see a danger. I donât deny that Emily is as innocent of suspicion as ever. But the chances, next time, may be against us. How do you know to what lengths your curiosity may lead you? Or on what shocking discoveries you may not blunder with the best intentions? Some unforeseen accident may open her eyes to the truth, before you can prevent it. I seem to surprise you?â
âYou do, indeed, surprise me.â
âIn the old story, my dear sir, Mentor sometimes surprised Telemachus. I am Mentorâwithout being, I hope, quite so long-winded as that respectable philosopher. Let me put it in two words. Emilyâs happiness is precious to you. Take care you are not made the means of wrecking it! Will you consent to a sacrifice, for her sake?â
âI will do anything for her sake.â
âWill you give up your inquiries?â
âFrom this moment I have done with them!â
âMr. Morris, you are the best friend she has.â
âThe next best friend to you, doctor.â
In that fond persuasion they now partedâtoo eagerly devoted to Emily to look at the prospect before them in its least hopeful aspect. Both clever men, neither one nor the other asked himself if any human resistance has ever yet obstructed the progress of truthâwhen truth has once begun to force its way to the light.
For the second time Alban stopped, on his way home. The longing to be reconciled with Emily was not to be resisted. He returned to the cottage, only to find disappointment waiting for him. The servant reported that her young mistress had gone to bed with a bad headache.
Alban waited a day, in the hope that Emily might write to him. No letter arrived. He repeated his visit the next morning. Fortune was still against him. On this occasion, Emily was engaged.
âEngaged with a visitor?â he asked.
âYes, sir. A young lady named Miss de Sor.â
Where had he heard that name before? He remembered immediately that he had heard it at the school. Miss de Sor was the unattractive new pupil, whom the girls called Francine. Alban looked at the parlor window as he left the cottage. It was of serious importance that he should set himself right with Emily. âAnd mere gossip,â he thought contemptuously, âstands in my way!â
If he had been less absorbed in his own interests, he might have remembered that mere gossip is not always to be despised. It has worked fatal mischief in its time.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
FRANCINE.
âYouâre surprised to see me, of course?â Saluting Emily in those terms, Francine looked round the parlor with an air of satirical curiosity. âDear me, what a little place to live in!â
âWhat brings you to London?â Emily inquired.
âYou ought to know, my dear, without asking. Why did I try to make friends with you at school? And why have I been trying ever since? Because I hate youâI mean because I canât resist youâno! I mean because I hate myself for liking you. Oh, never mind my reasons. I insisted on going to London with Miss Laddâwhen that horrid woman announced that she had an appointment with her lawyer. I said, âI want to see Emily.â âEmily doesnât like you.â âI donât care whether she likes me or not; I want to see her.â Thatâs the way we snap at each other, and thatâs how I always carry my point. Here I am, till my duenna finishes her business and fetches me. What a prospect for You! Have you got any cold meat in the house? Iâm not a glutton, like Ceciliaâbut Iâm afraid I shall want some lunch.â
âDonât talk in that way, Francine!â
âDo you mean to say youâre glad to see me?â
âIf you were only a little less hard and bitter, I should always be glad to see you.â
âYou darling! (excuse my impetuosity). What are you looking at? My new dress? Do you envy me?â
âNo; I admire the colorâthatâs all.â
Francine rose, and shook out her dress, and showed it from every point of view. âSee how itâs made: Paris, of course! Money, my dear; money will do anythingâexcept making one learn oneâs lessons.â
âAre you not getting on any better, Francine?â
âWorse, my sweet friendâworse. One of the masters, I am happy to say, has flatly refused to teach me any longer. âPupils without brains I am accustomed to,â he said in his broken English; âbut a pupil with no heart is beyond my endurance.â Ha! ha! the mouldy old refugee has an eye for character, though. No heartâthere I am, described in two words.â
âAnd proud of it,â Emily remarked.
âYesâproud of it. Stop! let me do myself justice. You consider tears a sign that one has some heart, donât you? I was very near crying last Sunday. A popular preacher did it; no less a person that Mr. Mirabelâyou look as if you had heard of him.â
âI
Comments (0)